Elections in Pennsylvania

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Elections in Pennsylvania elect the five state-level offices, the Pennsylvania General Assembly, including the senate and house of representatives, as well as the state's congressional delegation for the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives. Presidential elections are held every four years in Pennsylvania. Considered a swing state, it is one of the most competitive nationally, with narrow victories that alternate between the parties across all major offices. On the presidential level, the state has voted for the nationwide loser on only 10 occasions (1824, 1884, 1892, 1912, 1916, 1932, 1948, 1968, 2000, and 2004), meaning it has voted for the national winner 83% of the time, as of 2020.

In a 2020 study, Pennsylvania was ranked by the Election Law Journal as the 19th hardest state for citizens to vote in, based on registration and identification requirements, and convenience provisions.[1]

House of Representatives

Pennsylvania's congressional delegation is composed of nine Democrats and eight Republicans, since the 2022 elections.

The five most recent House elections:

Presidential elections

Below is a table of Pennsylvania's majority vote in the last twelve presidential elections, alongside the national electoral college results. On the presidential level, the state has voted for the nationwide loser on only 10 occasions – 1824, 1884, 1892, 1912, 1916, 1932, 1948, 1968, 2000, and 2004 – meaning it has voted for the national winner 83% of the time, as of 2020. Beginning with the 1992 election, the state has leaned Democratic, voting that way in seven of the nine elections from that year, though mostly by margins under 10 points.

United States Senate elections

Gubernatorial elections

More information Year, Democratic ...
Gubernatorial election results[2]
Year Democratic Republican
1950 48.3% 1,710,355 50.7% 1,796,119
1954 53.7% 1,996,266 46.2% 1,717,070
1958 50.8% 2,024,852 48.9% 1,948,769
1962 44.3% 1,938,627 55.3% 2,424,918
1966 46.1% 1,868,719 52.1% 2,110,349
1970 55.2% 2,043,029 41.7% 1,542,854
1974 53.7% 1,878,252 45.1% 1,578,917
1978 46.4% 1,737,888 52.5% 1,996,042
1982 48.1% 1,772,353 50.8% 1,872,784
1986 50.4% 1,717,484 48.4% 1,638,268
1990 67.7% 2,065,244 32.4% 987,516
1994 39.9% 1,430,099 45.4% 1,627,976
1998 31.0% 938,745 57.4% 1,736,844
2002 53.4% 1,913,235 44.4% 1,589,408
2006 60.3% 2,470,517 39.6% 1,622,135
2010 45.5% 1,814,788 54.5% 2,172,763
2014 54.9% 1,920,355 45.1% 1,575,511
2018 57.8% 2,850,210 40.7% 2,015,266
2022 56.5% 3,031,137 41.7% 2,238,477
Close

The ten most recent elections:

Democrats and Republicans have alternated in the governorship of Pennsylvania every eight years from 1950 to 2010.[3] This has been referred to as "the cycle",[4][5] but it was broken with a Democratic Party win in 2014. Pennsylvania has also voted against the party of the sitting president in 19 of the last 21 gubernatorial contests dating back to 1938; Democrats lost 16 of the previous 18 Pennsylvania gubernatorial races with a Democratic president in the White House, a pattern begun in 1860.[6]

Pennsylvania General Assembly elections

The Pennsylvania General Assembly is a bicameral legislature, consisting of the Pennsylvania State Senate (the upper house) and the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (lower house). Members of the state house serve for 2 year terms, while the term for the state senate is 4 years. There are no limits on the amount of terms that members of the state legislature can serve. Republicans controlled the state House for all but four years from 1995 until 2023, and they have controlled the state Senate uninterrupted since 1993.

Senate

The five most recent elections:

House of Representatives

The five most recent elections:

See also

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI